new new england chapter of the aapm (neaapm) · 2020. 6. 25. · first physics ‘phun run’ held!...

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New England Chapter of the AAPM (NEAAPM) Notable NEAAPM Events 1964 1st NEAAPM Constitution 1964 1st NEAAPM Constitution 1975 Constitution Revised, NEAAPM merges with two older groups: NERPO and BMPG 1981 AAPM Annual meeting held in Boston. First Physics ‘Phun Run’ held! 1987 Connecticut declares independence! CAMPS Chapter formed. Some members maintain ties to both groups. 1995 AAPM Annual Meeting held in Boston A few of the Physicists from the early days of the NEAAPM David Gladstone Immediate Past President James Brindle Treasurer Martin Fraser Meeting Coord. Comm. Chair President 1998 Lindsey Berkowitz CAMPEP Coordinator President 2018 Nolan Gagne Corporate Membership Committee Chair Jacek Kukluk Computer Science- IT Committee Chair Edward (Ted) Webster AAPM President 1963-1964 Bengt Bjärngard NEAAPM board Rep 1974-77 AAPM President 1979 Edward (Ned) S. Sternick NEAAPM Chairman 1974-1975 AAPM President 1984 1981 AAPM Annual Meeting: Boston MA Ned Sternick, local arrangements chair, at the awards ceremony with Colin Orton at his right. First “AAPM Fun Run:” runners assembled at the start, by the Charles River. The NEAAPM Today As of 2020 the NEAAPM has nearly 300 members. The Chapter has recently held three major meetings a year of scientific and professional talks. The fall meeting is a half day and the summer and winter meetings are a full day. These meetings all feature invited speakers from both inside and outside New England. Our winter meeting integrates our young investigators symposium with invited talks. A Short History of the New England Chapter of the AAPM (NEAAPM) New England has a history of professional medical physics activities going to the very early days of the AAPM. The greater Boston area, in particular, is home to a number of medical schools and affiliated teaching hospitals with a strong tradition of being at the forefront of technical innovation. The details of the very early origins are somewhat fragmentary, though the original constitution which created the New England chapter has survived. The document, written in January 1964, stated that the Chapter would include the states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. It was signed on March 3rd, 1964 by then AAPM president Edward (Ted) Webster. Originally from England, Ted was also from the Boston Area. He came to MIT in 1949 for postdoctoral work in nuclear physics and engineering and during this time became involved in a 2-MV cancer treatment program with Boston’s Lahey clinic. He later joined the staff of the department of Radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital in 1953 in the newly created post of physicist. In 1959 he became a charter member of the AAPM and served as the 5th president for the organization in 1963. Dr. Webster would have a long and distinguished career at MGH, retiring in 2001 after 47 years of service. He passed away in December 2005. While Ted Webster was from New England, his signature on the 1964 constitution was as AAPM President, and not as representative of the New England chapter per se. The signature for Secretary-Treasurer of the New England Chapter is that of William H. Ellett who appears to be the oldest documented member of the NEAAPM board. While not remembered specifically by older members still in New England today, he does appear on the 1959 list of charter members of the AAPM. A literature search reveals that in 1964 he was a physicist working at the Physics Research Laboratory at MGH. He appears on a number of publications from 1963-1968, including an article in the journal Nature, all co-authored with well known physicist and research laboratory director Gordon Brownell. His last paper in 1991 gives his affiliation as the National Research Council, Washington, D.C. After 1964, no records for the New England Chapter have surfaced which detail any activities or board members for almost a decade. However, two other New England medical physics groups were well known to exist at this time: the Boston Medical Physics Group (BMPG) and the New England Radiological Physics Organization (NERPO). The relationship between these groups and the NEAAPM is somewhat unclear, though some members from this time period recall that all three groups co- existed though NEAAPM was not very active at the time. In any case, it is likely that there was a significant overlap in membership. The BMPG is remembered primarily for holding monthly scientific meetings at the MIT faculty club. NERPO was founded as a collaborative venture inspired by an effort by the NE governors to facilitate regional collaboration. NERPO is best remembered for organizing a program of dosimetric comparisons between Boston area hospitals as well as those in New Hampshire and Maine. While working as a physicist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire, Edward (Ned) S Sternick served on the executive board of NERPO starting in 1971. During the years 1971-1972 the board began to discuss evolving NERPO and the BMPG into the New England Chapter of the NEAAPM. Ned was ultimately elected to serve as Chairman to the new reconstituted NEAAPM board for 1974-1975. In addition to Ned as chair, the board consisted of Saul Aronow as secretary/treasurer, Bengt Bjärngard as AAPM board representative with John Cardarelli and Philip Judy as members at large. All of these original members ultimately went on to have long distinguished careers in medical physics in the New England region. Ned Sternick left New Hampshire for Boston in 1978 to come to Tufts-New England Medical Center to serve as the Director of the Medical Physics Division. In 1981 the AAPM annual meeting was held in Boston and Ned served as chairman for the local arrangements. He was also elected to serve as AAPM president in 1984. Bengt Bjärngard became the Director of Physics and Engineering group at the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy (JCRT) which was established in 1968 to provide radiation oncology services to four of the Harvard Medical School teaching hospitals. Bengt was elected AAPM president in 1979. He would later be appointed a full Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School. Bengt recently passed away in January 2014. One of the tasks before the 1974-1975 NEAAPM board was to update the original constitution. A letter from Ned Sternick to the members dated March 6, 1975 notes the hard work of Farideh Bagne, Joe Blinick, and Ken Wright at revising the constitution to make it “more responsive to the professional, scientific, and educational needs of New England physicists”. While no surviving copy of the 1975 constitution has been found, one obvious change of the new constitution was to redefine the officers of the board. The post of Chairman was replaced by President and the position of President-elect was added. The 1976-1977 board consisted of Joseph Blinick as president and Saul Aronow as President Elect. Herb Mower filled the position of secretary/treasurer while Bengt Bjärngard remained on as national board representative. There is no record of other members-at-large. Other than that and the fact that secretary/treasurer was one position this is similar to the board structure that is used today. Acknowledgements and Disclaimer The historical information presented here on the early days of the NEAAPM was based on a few available documents and the recollections of members. An effort was made to be as accurate as possible, but some minor speculation was necessary to ‘fill in the gaps’. Please forgive any errors, particularly those of omission. Anyone with additional information or corrections is encouraged to bring it to the attention of the NEAAPM board. We would, in particular, like to include more photos of former board members. Special thanks to Phil Judy for locating many old documents, including the 1964 Constitution! Additional thanks are due to Ned Sternick, who located the 1981 AAPM Photos, as well as Bengt Bjarngard, Joe Blinick, John & Gene Cardarelli and a number of others who contributed their recollections. Once again, please forgive us for anyone we’ve forgotten! The NEAAPM Board 2020 Joseph Blinick NEAAPM President 1976-1977 Saul Aronow, NEAAPM President 1978-1979, with Prof Gordon Brownell and an early positron brain scanner, MGH, circa 1955 Greg Sharp Rep. Board Member President 2017 Cynthia Pope President Per Halvorsen President Elect Jennifer Pursley Secretary Fenghong Liu Officer at Large Carla Bradford Nom. Committee Chair President 2016 2020 NEAAPM Officers Ross Berbeco Peter Biggs Joseph Blinick Suresh Brahmavar Thomas Bortfeld Gene Cardarelli Eileen Cirino George TY Chen Robert Cormack Bruce Curran Karen Doppke Georges El Fakhri Edward Epp Frederic Fahey Martin Fraser David Gierga Per Halvorsen Philip Judy Andrew Karellas Kenneth Kase Hsiao-Ming Lu Herbert Mower Andrzej Niemierko Harald Paganetti Mark Rivard William Roventine Douglas Shearer Edward Sternick Marcia Urie Srinivasan Vedantham Robert Zamenhof Robert Zimmerman 1974-1975 Edward Sternick 1976-1977 Joseph Blinick 1978-1979 Saul Aronow 1979-1980 Arthur Boyer 1980-1981 Robert Zimmerman 1981-1982 Kenneth Kase 1982-1983 Robert Wenstrup, Jr. 1983-1984 Karen Doppke 1984-1985 Robert Zamenhof 1985-1986 William Roventine 1986-1987 Andrew Wu 1987-1988 Bruce Curran 1988-1989 Lynn Verhey 1989-1990 Stephen Moore 1990-1991 Chris. Constantinou 1991-1992 Frank Ascoli 1992-1993 Andrew Karellas 1993-1994 Marie Foley Kijewski 1994-1995 Richard Behrman 1995-1996 Douglas Wagenaar 1996-1997 Marcia Urie 1997-1998 Martin Fraser 1999 Suresh Brahmavar 2000 Paul Imbergamo 2001 Lee Chin 2002 Charles Mayo 2003 Eileen Cirino 2004 Peter Biggs 2005 Douglas Shearer 2006 YC Lo 2007 Mark Rivard 2008 Gene Cardarelli 2009 Robert Cormack 2010 Georges El Fakhri 2011 Frederic Fahey 2012 Joseph Killoran 2013 Jessica Hiatt 2014 David Gierga 2015 Ross Berbeco 2016 Carla Bradford 2017 Greg Sharp 2018 Lindsey Berkowitz 2019 David Gladstone 2020 Cynthia Pope 2020 NEAAPM SLAM and Young Investigators Symposium 1979 NEAAPM Young Investigators Symposium Young Investigator Symposium AAPM Fellows NEAAPM Presidents 2014 Summer Meeting Yulia Lyatskaya Education Committee Chair

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  • New England Chapter of the AAPM (NEAAPM)

    Notable NEAAPM Events

    1964 1st NEAAPM Constitution

    •1964 1st NEAAPM Constitution

    •1975 Constitution Revised, NEAAPM merges with two

    older groups: NERPO and BMPG

    •1981 AAPM Annual meeting held in Boston.

    First Physics ‘Phun Run’ held!

    •1987 Connecticut declares independence!

    CAMPS Chapter formed. Some members maintain ties

    to both groups.

    •1995 AAPM Annual Meeting held in Boston

    A few of the Physicists from the early

    days of the NEAAPM

    David Gladstone

    Immediate Past President

    James Brindle

    Treasurer

    Martin Fraser

    Meeting Coord. Comm. Chair

    President 1998

    Lindsey Berkowitz

    CAMPEP Coordinator

    President 2018

    Nolan Gagne

    Corporate Membership

    Committee Chair

    Jacek Kukluk

    Computer Science-

    IT Committee Chair

    Edward (Ted) WebsterAAPM President 1963-1964

    Bengt BjärngardNEAAPM board Rep 1974-77

    AAPM President 1979

    Edward (Ned) S. SternickNEAAPM Chairman 1974-1975

    AAPM President 1984

    1981 AAPM Annual Meeting: Boston MA

    Ned Sternick, local arrangements chair, at the

    awards ceremony with Colin Orton at his right. First “AAPM Fun Run:” runners assembled at the start,

    by the Charles River.

    The NEAAPM Today

    As of 2020 the NEAAPM has nearly 300 members. The Chapter

    has recently held three major meetings a year of scientific and

    professional talks. The fall meeting is a half day and the summer

    and winter meetings are a full day. These meetings all feature

    invited speakers from both inside and outside New England. Our

    winter meeting integrates our young investigators symposium with

    invited talks.

    A Short History of the New England

    Chapter of the AAPM (NEAAPM)New England has a history of professional medical physics activities going to the very early days of the AAPM. The greater

    Boston area, in particular, is home to a number of medical schools and affiliated teaching hospitals with a strong tradition of

    being at the forefront of technical innovation.

    The details of the very early origins are somewhat fragmentary, though the original constitution which created the New

    England chapter has survived. The document, written in January 1964, stated that the Chapter would include the states of

    Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. It was signed on March 3rd, 1964 by then

    AAPM president Edward (Ted) Webster. Originally from England, Ted was also from the Boston Area. He came to MIT in

    1949 for postdoctoral work in nuclear physics and engineering and during this time became involved in a 2-MV cancer

    treatment program with Boston’s Lahey clinic. He later joined the staff of the department of Radiology at Massachusetts

    General Hospital in 1953 in the newly created post of physicist. In 1959 he became a charter member of the AAPM and

    served as the 5th president for the organization in 1963. Dr. Webster would have a long and distinguished career at MGH,

    retiring in 2001 after 47 years of service. He passed away in December 2005.

    While Ted Webster was from New England, his signature on the 1964 constitution was as AAPM President, and not as

    representative of the New England chapter per se. The signature for Secretary-Treasurer of the New England Chapter is that

    of William H. Ellett who appears to be the oldest documented member of the NEAAPM board. While not remembered

    specifically by older members still in New England today, he does appear on the 1959 list of charter members of the AAPM. A

    literature search reveals that in 1964 he was a physicist working at the Physics Research Laboratory at MGH. He appears on

    a number of publications from 1963-1968, including an article in the journal Nature, all co-authored with well known physicist

    and research laboratory director Gordon Brownell. His last paper in 1991 gives his affiliation as the National Research

    Council, Washington, D.C.

    After 1964, no records for the New England Chapter have surfaced which detail any activities or board members for almost a

    decade. However, two other New England medical physics groups were well known to exist at this time: the Boston Medical

    Physics Group (BMPG) and the New England Radiological Physics Organization (NERPO). The relationship between these

    groups and the NEAAPM is somewhat unclear, though some members from this time period recall that all three groups co-

    existed though NEAAPM was not very active at the time. In any case, it is likely that there was a significant overlap in

    membership. The BMPG is remembered primarily for holding monthly scientific meetings at the MIT faculty club. NERPO was

    founded as a collaborative venture inspired by an effort by the NE governors to facilitate regional collaboration. NERPO is

    best remembered for organizing a program of dosimetric comparisons between Boston area hospitals as well as those in

    New Hampshire and Maine.

    While working as a physicist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire, Edward (Ned) S Sternick served on

    the executive board of NERPO starting in 1971. During the years 1971-1972 the board began to discuss evolving NERPO

    and the BMPG into the New England Chapter of the NEAAPM. Ned was ultimately elected to serve as Chairman to the new

    reconstituted NEAAPM board for 1974-1975. In addition to Ned as chair, the board consisted of Saul Aronow as

    secretary/treasurer, Bengt Bjärngard as AAPM board representative with John Cardarelli and Philip Judy as members at

    large.

    All of these original members ultimately went on to have long distinguished careers in medical physics in the New England

    region. Ned Sternick left New Hampshire for Boston in 1978 to come to Tufts-New England Medical Center to serve as the

    Director of the Medical Physics Division. In 1981 the AAPM annual meeting was held in Boston and Ned served as chairman

    for the local arrangements. He was also elected to serve as AAPM president in 1984.

    Bengt Bjärngard became the Director of Physics and Engineering group at the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy (JCRT)

    which was established in 1968 to provide radiation oncology services to four of the Harvard Medical School teaching

    hospitals. Bengt was elected AAPM president in 1979. He would later be appointed a full Professor of Radiation Oncology at

    Harvard Medical School. Bengt recently passed away in January 2014.

    One of the tasks before the 1974-1975 NEAAPM board was to update the original constitution. A letter from Ned Sternick to

    the members dated March 6, 1975 notes the hard work of Farideh Bagne, Joe Blinick, and Ken Wright at revising the

    constitution to make it “more responsive to the professional, scientific, and educational needs of New England physicists”.

    While no surviving copy of the 1975 constitution has been found, one obvious change of the new constitution was to redefine

    the officers of the board. The post of Chairman was replaced by President and the position of President-elect was added. The

    1976-1977 board consisted of Joseph Blinick as president and Saul Aronow as President Elect. Herb Mower filled the

    position of secretary/treasurer while Bengt Bjärngard remained on as national board representative. There is no record of

    other members-at-large. Other than that and the fact that secretary/treasurer was one position this is similar to the board

    structure that is used today.

    Acknowledgements and Disclaimer

    The historical information presented here on the early days of the NEAAPM was based on a

    few available documents and the recollections of members. An effort was made to be as

    accurate as possible, but some minor speculation was necessary to ‘fill in the gaps’. Please

    forgive any errors, particularly those of omission. Anyone with additional information or

    corrections is encouraged to bring it to the attention of the NEAAPM board. We would, in

    particular, like to include more photos of former board members.

    Special thanks to Phil Judy for locating many old documents, including the 1964

    Constitution!

    Additional thanks are due to Ned Sternick, who located the 1981 AAPM Photos, as well as

    Bengt Bjarngard, Joe Blinick, John & Gene Cardarelli and a number of others who

    contributed their recollections.

    Once again, please forgive us for anyone we’ve forgotten!

    The NEAAPM Board – 2020

    Joseph Blinick

    NEAAPM President 1976-1977

    Saul Aronow, NEAAPM President 1978-1979, with Prof Gordon

    Brownell and an early positron brain scanner, MGH, circa 1955

    Greg Sharp

    Rep. Board Member

    President 2017

    Cynthia Pope

    PresidentPer Halvorsen

    President Elect

    Jennifer Pursley

    Secretary

    Fenghong Liu

    Officer at Large

    Carla Bradford

    Nom. Committee Chair

    President 2016

    2020 NEAAPM Officers

    Ross Berbeco

    Peter Biggs

    Joseph Blinick

    Suresh Brahmavar

    Thomas Bortfeld

    Gene Cardarelli

    Eileen Cirino

    George TY Chen

    Robert Cormack

    Bruce Curran

    Karen Doppke

    Georges El Fakhri

    Edward Epp

    Frederic Fahey

    Martin Fraser

    David Gierga

    Per Halvorsen

    Philip Judy

    Andrew Karellas

    Kenneth Kase

    Hsiao-Ming Lu

    Herbert Mower

    Andrzej Niemierko

    Harald Paganetti

    Mark Rivard

    William Roventine

    Douglas Shearer

    Edward Sternick

    Marcia Urie

    Srinivasan Vedantham

    Robert Zamenhof

    Robert Zimmerman

    1974-1975 Edward Sternick

    1976-1977 Joseph Blinick

    1978-1979 Saul Aronow

    1979-1980 Arthur Boyer

    1980-1981 Robert Zimmerman

    1981-1982 Kenneth Kase

    1982-1983 Robert Wenstrup, Jr.

    1983-1984 Karen Doppke

    1984-1985 Robert Zamenhof

    1985-1986 William Roventine

    1986-1987 Andrew Wu

    1987-1988 Bruce Curran

    1988-1989 Lynn Verhey

    1989-1990 Stephen Moore

    1990-1991 Chris. Constantinou

    1991-1992 Frank Ascoli

    1992-1993 Andrew Karellas

    1993-1994 Marie Foley Kijewski

    1994-1995 Richard Behrman

    1995-1996 Douglas Wagenaar

    1996-1997 Marcia Urie

    1997-1998 Martin Fraser

    1999 Suresh Brahmavar

    2000 Paul Imbergamo

    2001 Lee Chin

    2002 Charles Mayo

    2003 Eileen Cirino

    2004 Peter Biggs

    2005 Douglas Shearer

    2006 YC Lo

    2007 Mark Rivard

    2008 Gene Cardarelli

    2009 Robert Cormack

    2010 Georges El Fakhri

    2011 Frederic Fahey

    2012 Joseph Killoran

    2013 Jessica Hiatt

    2014 David Gierga

    2015 Ross Berbeco

    2016 Carla Bradford

    2017 Greg Sharp

    2018 Lindsey Berkowitz

    2019 David Gladstone

    2020 Cynthia Pope2020 NEAAPM SLAM and Young Investigators Symposium

    1979 NEAAPM Young Investigators Symposium

    Young Investigator Symposium

    AAPM Fellows

    NEAAPM Presidents

    2014 Summer Meeting

    Yulia Lyatskaya

    Education Committee

    Chair